COLONEL FRANCIS S. "GABBY" GABRESKI - AUTOGRAPH LETTER SIGNED - HFSID 264310
Sale Price $270.00
Reg. $300.00
FRANCIS S. GABRESKI
He explains why the nose of his WWII P-47 went unpainted.
Autograph Letter signed: "F. S. Gabreski", ¼ p, 8½x11. Written
at bottom of an undated, typed letter from Lee Mar of Dix Hills, N.Y., asking
what kind of nose art Gabreski used on his plane, and why. In full:
"In WW II, my P-47 had no art painted on the nose. Other than the
swastikas that were painted on the left side of the cockpit and the usual
squadron lettering HV-A. I don't know why I showed no interest in having my
aeroplane painted for distinction. My best wishes. Sincerely. Francis S.
"Gabby" Gabreski (1919-2002) ranks as the all-time top U.S. Army Air Force ace.
He was one of only seven USAF pilots who was an ace in both WWII and the Korean
War. Beginning his career flying sorties against the Japanese at Pearl
Harbor, the Polish-speaking pilot started to fly Spitfires in January 1943 with
the 315 (Polish) Squadron of the RAF. After a few weeks, Gabreski was assigned
to Zemke's 56th Fighter Group, flying P-47 Thunderbolts without seeing
any action until August 24, 1943, when he scored his first victory. From then
on, he downed 28 enemy aircraft, leading all pilots in the European theatre.
After 193 missions, the Air Force was ready to send him home but, shortly before
boarding the plane, he discovered that a mission was set for that morning. On
July 20, 1944, Gabreski crash-landed during a strafing sortie and hid out for
five days. Although he persuaded a Polish-speaking forced laborer to bring food
and water, Gabreski was captured and imprisoned in Stalag Luft I, a German POW
camp for the remaining eight months of the war. He returned to military
service in the Korean War and shot down six MIG 15s. He was the recipient
of the Distinguished Service Cross, a Silver Star, the Distinguished Flying
Cross, a Bronze Star, the Air Medal and awards from the French and Polish
governments. Lightly creased. 3½-inch vertical tear touches top three lines of
Gabreski's reply, not obscuring any of it.
Following offer submission users will be contacted at their account email address within 48 hours. Our response will be to accept your offer, decline your offer or send you a final counteroffer. All offers can be viewed from within the "Offer Review" area of your HistoryForSale account. Please review the Make Offer Terms prior to making an offer.
If you have not received an offer acceptance or counter-offer email within 24-hours please check your spam/junk email folder.